List of sterile insect technique trials


The sterile insect technique is an environmentally friendly method for the biological control of pests using area-wide inundative release of sterile insects to reduce reproduction in a field population of the same species. SIT technique may be applied as part of an area-wide control approach of insects of medical, veterinary, and agricultural importance. It was in 1937 when Edward Knipling proposed using sterilization to control or eradicate insect pests after observation that screwworm fly males mate repeatedly while females mate only once. He then made the hypothesis that if large numbers of sterile males could repeatedly be released into wild populations, it would eventually eliminate population reproduction and lead to eradication.
This table is a list of sterile insect technique trials worldwide.
TargetYearLocationMethodOutcome
Tsetse flyTanzaniaRelease of Glossina morsitans centralis into a Glossina swynnertoni populationHybrid males were sterile and the female hybrids partially sterile. 99% suppression in 26 km2
Cochliomyia hominivoraxUnited States: Sanibel Island, Florida and ChinaRelease 39 sterile male flies per km2 per week for several weeksField evaluation pilot test. Resulted in up to 100% sterility of the egg masses, greatly reduced the wild population, incomplete eradication because of the wild fertile flies flying from the mainland.
Cochliomyia hominivoraxNetherlands Antilles: Curaçao Released 155 sterile males per km2 per week100% egg sterility after 2 generations. Evident eradication was accomplished within 14 weeks. Releases were stopped after 22 weeks.
Cochliomyia hominivoraxUnited States: FloridaRelease 155–1160 sterile flies per km2 per weekEradication. Total cost was $11M, about 50% of the annual losses.
Cochliomyia hominivoraxUnited States: Texas and western statesRelease 200–1000 sterile flies per km2 per weekDeclared eradication in Texas and New Mexico in 1964 and in the entire USA in 1966. Thereafter, the program goal changed to population containment from the initial eradication
Cochliomyia hominivoraxCentral AmericaSterile flies releaseDeclared eradication in Mexico, 1991, Guatemala, 1994, El Salvador 1995, Honduras 1996, Nicaragua 1999, Costa Rica 2000, Panama, 2001
Cochliomyia hominivoraxLibyaRelease 40 million sterile flies per weekOperated by a joint FAO/IAEA Division. Only 6 instances of wounds infested with screwworm larvae were found in 1991, compared with more than 12000 cases in 1990. Eradication was declared in June 1992
Mexican fruit flyUnited States: Southern California and TexasFor eradication, release 96,000 and 61,500 sterile flies per km2 per week in CA and TX, respectivelyStarted to eradicate in CA in 1964 and to exclude in TX a decade later. Continued as containment program
Bactrocera tryoniAustraliaReleased 1600 million sterile flies in 1990. For containment method, release 60,000 sterile flies per km2 for 12 weeks after catching the last wild fly.Field trials began in 1962. Population was suppressed strongly, but not eradicated because of long-range immigrants. Eradication was achieved in Western Australia in 1990. Since the mid-1990s, it has been used as containment method.
Ceratitis capitataMexico and GuatemalaProduced 500 million and 3,500 million sterile flies per week in Mexico and Guatemala, respectivelyFirst large-scale fruit fly AW-IPM program using SIT. Eradication in 1982. For over 25 years, this program kept Mexico, the US, and half of Guatemala free of the pest. Genetic sexing strains were later introduced.
Melon flyJapanReleased up to 4 million sterile fly pupae per week, total 264 million during the pilot test. Total 50,000 million sterile flies were released.A pilot experiment began in 1972 and eradication was declared in 1978. An operation program started in 1984. Complete eradication achieved in 1993.
Ceratitis capitataIsraelReleased malesGenetic sexing strain
Ceratitis capitataUnited States: California and FloridaRelease sterile males of the tsl sexing strain VIENNA 7Started as eradication program. It was successful and cost-effective and thereafter applied as a permanent preventative program in CA, FL, and Guatemala.
Ceratitis capitataJordan-Israel-PalestineReleased genetic sexing strain VIENNA 7As population suppression rather than eradication
Onion maggotNetherlandsSterile insects are provided from a private sourceThe program has not been able to expand beyond 16% of the onion production area due to free-riders. Ongoing long-term suppression program over 20 years
Tsetse flyBurkina Faso, Nigeria and Tanzania Combination method with attractant traps and insecticidesEradication
Tsetse flyUgandaAutosterilization of wild fliesSuppression
Anopheles quadrimaculatusUnited States: FloridaRelease adult males after sterilizing in pupal stage. 430,000 males over 48 wks at 2 locationsPoor competitiveness. No population reduction.
Culex quinquefasciatusMyanmar: OkpoRelease 5000 daily for 9 wks. Sterility from cytoplasmic incompatibilityPopulation eliminated
Culex quinquefasciatusUnited States: FloridaRelease 930,000 males over 12 wks after chemosterilization with thiotepaPopulation suppressed and eliminated partially due to the sterile males released
Culex pipiensFranceRelease hundreds of thousands over 8 wks after sterilizing with chromosome translocationPopulation reduced due to the persistent translocation
Culex quinquefasciatusIndia: DelhiRelease 300,000 sterile males daily over 14 wks, total 23 million. Sterilization with cytoplasmic incompatibility, and chromosome translocation.Population reduced due to the established sterility from cytoplasmic incompatibility and translocation.
Culex quinquefasciatusIndia: DelhiRelease total 38 million sterile males over 25 wks. Chemoterilization with thiotepa.Up to 90% sterile eggs, but no clear population suppression due to immigration
Aedes aegyptiKenya: MombasaRelease 57,000 genetically modified males over 10 wks. Sterilization with chromosome translocationPartial sterility, but no long-term persistent translocation
Anopheles albimanusEl Salvador: Lake ApastepequeReleased 4.4 million sterile males over 22 wks. Chemosterilization of genetic sexing strain pupae with bisazir.100% sterility induced in wild population. Well below detection level after 5 months.
Anopheles albimanusEl Salvador: Pacific coastReleased 100s million males. Bisazir sterilization. Use genetic sexing strain.Target field population was reduced by 97%, but eradication prevented by unexpected immigration.
Culex tarsalisUnited States: CaliforniaReleased 85,000 males over 8 wks after sterilizing with adult irradiationAssortative mating was observed, but no population reduction.
CockchafersSwitzerlandReleased 3,109 and 8,594 males after radiation sterilization.Field trials. The population was reduced by 80% and 100%.
Boll weevilUnited States: MississippiCombined methods of insecticide and SITLarge pilot field experiment. Population was suppressed below detection levels in 203 of 236 fields. The remainder were close to uncontrolled area.
Sweetpotato weevilJapanReleased sterile weevils after insecticide application.Complete eradication
LepidopteraCanada: British ColumbiaReleased irradiated codling mothsAs a population suppression method
Aedes albopictusReunion IslandSemi field condition test using the sterilizing dose of 40 Gy with cesium-137 irradiatortwo-fold reduction of the wild population's fertility
Aedes aegyptiQueensland, AustraliaReleased >3 million males sterilized with the natural bacteria Wolbachia80% reduction of the population in trial areas